Category Archives: Lens and Light

Jeff Ascough Lens & Light Honor

The Lens & Light Honor is awarded to twelve photographers each year who are true leaders in the world of wedding photography. We look for photographers who produce stunning, modern, artistic imagery at the frontier of the field and for photographers who have achieved a rare level of success and recognition among brides, fellow photographers, and others in the wedding industry. We are proud to recognize Jeff Ascough with the Lens & Light Honor.

~

© Jeff Ascough

~

“One of the world’s greatest wedding photographers”

~ Canon Professional

“One of the ten best wedding photographers in the world”

~ American Photo

“A master at shooting by available light”

~ The Washington Post

~

Known the world over for his stunning documentary-style wedding photography and his work as a Canon Ambassador, Jeff Ascough works to elevate wedding photography to an art form. Inspired by Henri Cartier-Bresson and the work of James Nachtwey. Jeff’s unobtrusive approach yields honest, truthful and timeless images that serve as treasured memories for his brides.

For Jeff, a wedding is a sacred occasion – and the photographer’s role is to capture the unfolding events quietly, simply, without attracting attention. He challenges himself to create his award-winning wedding images by using available light almost exclusively. He shoots deliberately and carefully, crafting each image with incredible care. For Jeff, every picture should stand out. Every single photograph should be both aesthetically appealing and emotionally evocative.

With more than 20 years of wedding photography experience, Jeff has used this documentary storytelling approach to cover more than 1000 wedding assignments. His client roster boasts countless girls-next-door and plenty of celebrities including Kevin Pieterson and Jessica Taylor, Jill Halfpenny and Craig Conway and Radiohead guitarist Ed O’Brien.

~

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

~

How did you get into wedding photography?

I was invited to join my parents fledgling photography business back in 1989. I was actually thinking about doing a degree in Psychology prior to that, but I found that photography was really what I wanted to do in life.

How would you describe your style?

In short I shoot documentary/street style images on a wedding day. My style is unobtrusive but faithful and true to the people and the events that surround the wedding day.

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

What cameras do you shoot with, what’s your favorite lens, and what’s your favorite accessory other than your cameras/lenses?

I currently shoot with two Canon EOS 1DMKIV cameras. My favourite lens will always be the 50mm f1.2L but I find myself shooting mainly with the 16-35 f2.8LII these days.

How important is post processing in your final images?

It is paramount to my style. With good post processing I can create the image that was in my mind’s eye when I pressed the shutter. For me, capturing the actual image is only the start of making a great picture.

Who or what inspires you to create great imagery?

I have always been inspired by the great documentary/street photographers of the 21st Century, and I guess I always will be. Cartier-Bresson is the biggest influence on my style, his love of composition and the ‘decisive moment’ are ingrained in my photographic soul.

Sebastiao Salgado and his use of light, and the way he has his images printed to bring drama to his pictures are important to me. I also like the way he sees a collection of pictures as being important in telling the story.

I enjoy the work of Gary Winogrand, Eugene Richards and James Nachtwey for their use of space and wide-angle lenses—something which I have noticed in my work over the past couple of years. Then there are legends like Don McCullin who continues to inspire and challenge me when it comes to taking pictures, not just at a wedding. I rarely look at other wedding photography—it just doesn’t interest me at all.

What is the most challenging thing about photographing weddings?

For me it is all about trying to improve my work, season on season. I find actually shooting a wedding really easy and comfortable, as I’ve been doing it for so long now, but I always push and challenge myself to get better images. I still practice different shooting techniques away from the wedding, and I continue to train myself to become a better photographer.

What do you think are the most important trends in wedding photography today?

Honestly. I have no idea. I don’t tend to follow wedding photography.

If not a photographer, what would you want to be?

A criminal psychologist. Psychology is my other passion.

~

VISIT WEBSITE: JEFF ASCOUGH

~

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

© Jeff Ascough

Emotions high altitude

Some pictures made during my service in February 2010
Emotions high altitude pictures taken in unusual locations around 1800 meters altitude. The winter day but with a beautiful blue sky. This wedding has been made in the mountains near Lake Como in Italy, a location with strong contrast between mountains and lake. For shooting outdoors, we reached the summit of the mountain with a helicopter …. needless to say the emotion and joy of the newlyweds when they saw the beautiful scenery with their eyes.  The light at this altitude is fantastic, and natural and emotional.

The bride and groom on the snow to take pictures unique and unusual.
I do not happen every day to be in a location like this, maybe it would impossiile to reach!

romantic image and emotion in this unusual landscape of snow

  

a particular detail of the bride’s shoes in the snow

The wedding ends with a nice show of fireworks!

photographer LUIGI ROTA

www.luigirota.com

FOTOROTA STUDIO

ITALY

DATE:  February 13  – 2110

THE GROOM : LUCA

THE BRIDE:  MICHELA

LOCATION: LAKE COMO ITALY

Alisha and Brook Todd: Lens & Light Honor

The Lens & Light Honor is awarded to twelve photographers each year who are true leaders in the world of wedding photography. We look for photographers who produce stunning, modern, artistic imagery at the frontier of the field and for photographers who have achieved a rare level of success and recognition among brides, fellow photographers, and others in the wedding industry. We are proud to recognize Alisha and Brook Todd with our first-ever Lens & Light Honor.

~

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd 2010

~

One of the Top 10 Photographers in the World

American Photo

Fabulous photographers capturing every moment, Brook and Alisha Todd

Oprah Winfrey

~

Happily married for more than 10 years, Alisha and Brook share a passion for people and art which is readily evident in their blend of documentary and fine art photography. Alisha and Brook live in sunny California with their beautiful daughter (whom they adore), Giada Bella.

This dynamic duo travels worldwide to photograph destination weddings ~ from the warm, sandy beaches of Mexico and Hawaii to the breathtaking hills of romantic Tuscany, Italy. Locally, it might seem that Alisha and Brook have left their hearts in San Francisco, since many of the California weddings they photograph are in this lovely city by the bay. Yet, you’ll also frequently find them shooting weddings in the vineyards of Napa Valley and in charming Carmel.

No strangers to Hollywood, Alisha and Brook have photographed A-list celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey, Shania Twain, jazz artists Diana Krall and Chris Botti, Adam Sandler, and Rob Schneider. Alisha and Brook also photographed the wedding of Major League Baseball player Pat Burrell (of the Phillies). In 2004, Alisha and Brook photographed the nationally-televised Fantasy Wedding Dreams Come True (designed by celebrity event planner Colin Cowie) which was featured on the Oprah Show. As their images appeared at the conclusion of the show, Oprah acknowledged them as “Fabulous photographers capturing every moment, Brook and Alisha Todd.”

In 2007, Alisha and Brook were named by American PHOTO magazine as one of the 10 Best Wedding Photographers in the World.

Not surprisingly, their images have have graced the pages of many top magazines including Destination Weddings, Grace Ormonde Wedding Style, Weddingbells, The Knot, Elegant Bride and Get Married. Alisha and Brook have also appeared in books including Signature Sasha: Magnificent Weddings by Design, The Best of Wedding Photography, and The Portrait Photographers. In addition, they have also been interviewed in articles of the following publications:  Studio PhotographyAmerican PHOTOKodak’s ProPass, and Rangefinder.

Awards granted to Alisha and Brook include the Grand Award for Photojournalism and First Place for Wedding Photojournalism from WPPI, and they have both received the Accolade of Photographic Mastery for their award-winning images. Sponsored by Kodak, Alisha and Brook continue to speak at WPPI’s international conventions as platform speakers. And as two of the founding members of “The Shortlist,” a select group of elite wedding professionals in San Francisco, Alisha and Brook are also members of PPA.

~

VISIT WEBSITE: ALISHA AND BROOK PHOTOGRAPHERS

~

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd

~

How did you get into wedding photography?

I knew from the very beginning when I took my first photography class in high school, that this was what I wanted to do. I started with portrait work while I was in college and then when a close friend was going to get married and asked me to photograph her wedding. I realized that I enjoyed it and that this was going to be my direction.

Brook had taken photography in high school also, but started at first with carpentry, which he did for several years. He assisted me during my first couple of years in doing wedding photography, and we discovered that he had the ‘eye’ for this. He’d found his niche, too.

How would you describe your style?

We’ve said for years that our style was ‘fine art meets photojournalism’. The truth is that since we’ve left film a couple of years ago, I would say that our work took on a different look: a more cinematic look. Our vision is fashion, with romance.

What cameras do you shoot with, what’s your favorite lens, and what’s your favorite accessory other than your cameras/lenses?

We use Canon 5D’s. Brook’s favorite lens is the 35-350 because it’s so versatile. Of course, it’s not a good lens indoors, but we shoot a lot of Napa weddings, which are predominantly outdoors. My fave is the 70-200 2.8 IS, which is fabulous indoors and outdoors. It’s a great lens to shoot photojournalistically and not be in anyone’s face. I love a big telephoto lens for the portraits of the bride and also the bride and groom. We both adore our 85 mm 1.2 lens!

As far as an accessory is concerned, I like to use a tripod to get scene setters that show off the reception. It’s not that I couldn’t skip it and just shoot high speed, but I always used it with film and I like to get the best quality scene setters.

How important is post processing in your final images?

While post processing can be very creative, the most important part is that the image has to be there first. It shouldn’t be about shooting a massive amount of images and hoping that some of them work, nor telling yourself that you can just make it work later. We do enhance the images, but feel that the impact of the initial image is primary and the enhancement is secondary. The enhancement, to me, should be like spice: it’s needed but should improve what’s already there.

Who or what inspires you to create great imagery?

We’ve been inspired by a number of great photographers during our career. However, a lot of other things have inspired us, too, such as film noire from the forties, the cinematography of some current movies and a lot of music videos, which are usually pretty cutting edge.

What is the most challenging thing about photographing weddings?

When other things run late before you, the photography time is reduced by the length of time that the previous vendor was over. Then the photographer has to produce the expected body of work with a reduced time, catch the timeline up to speed and get the bride and groom to the reception on time. There can be other things occasionally, such as guests who think that they are the official photographer and try to shoot every shot over your shoulder.

What do you think are the most important trends in wedding photography today?

This is probably not the answer you might expect, but the biggest trend in wedding photography is that  brides think that is that every photographer is negotiable. We realize that people are affected by the recession, but  quality should still be viewed as quality. To quote something from Grace Ormonde: ‘The bitterness of poor quality remains long after low pricing is forgotten’. We know how important the photographs are. These become the client’s memories when day rushes by like a blur. We need to remind people people how meaningful these images are when this is all that remains of such a momentous day in their life.

If not a photographer, what would you want to be?

Brook says that he would do something in sales. I would either be a makeup artist or a Disney princess!

~

VISIT WEBSITE: ALISHA AND BROOK PHOTOGRAPHERS

~

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd

Copyright Alisha and Brook Todd